Jane Addams
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Cite This SourceLaura Jane Addams (September 6, 1860 – May 21, 1935) was a founder of the U.S. Settlement House movement, and the first American woman to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
Biography
Born in a small town called Cedarville Illinois. Jane Addams was the eighth of nine children born into a prosperous miller family. Her father was banker and state senator John H. Addams. She was first cousin twice removed to Charles Addams, noted macabre cartoonist for The New Yorker. She was born with a congenital spinal defect and although this was later corrected by surgery, she was never truly robust.
Addams' father taught her philanthropy and care for people. He encouraged her to pursue a higher education, but not at the expense of losing her femininity and the prospect of marriage and motherhood, as expected of upper class young women. She was educated in the United States and Europe, graduating from the Rockford Female Seminary (now Rockford College) in Rockford, Illinois. After Rockford, she wanted to pursue a degree in medicine, but her parents felt that she was sufficiently educated and feared for her marriage prospects.
While in London, Addams was influenced by Andrew Mearn's essay, The Bitter Cry of Outcast London, which highlighted slum conditions. She visited Europe when she was 27 years old, visiting Toynbee Hall, a settlement house in the East End of London.
Hull House
In 1889 she and her friend,. Ellen Gates Starr co-founded Hull House in Chicago, Illinois, one of the first settlement houses in the United States. At its height, Hull House was visited each week by around two thousand people. Its facilities included a night school for adults, kindergarten classes, clubs for older children, a public kitchen, an art gallery, a coffeehouse, a gymnasium, a girls club, a swimming pool, a book bindery, a music school, a drama group, a library, and labor-related divisions. She is probably most remembered for her adult night school, a forerunner of the continuing education classes offered by many community colleges today.Hull House also served as a women's sociological institution. Addams was a friend and colleague to the early members of the Chicago School of Sociology, influencing their thought through her work in applied sociology and, in 1893, co-authoring the Hull-House Maps and Papers that came to define the interests and methodologies of the School. She worked with George H. Mead on social reform issues including promoting women's rights, ending child labor, and the mediating during the 1910 Garment Workers' Strike. Although academic sociologists of the time defined her work as "social work", Addams did not consider herself a social worker. She combined the central concepts of symbolic interactionism with the theories of cultural feminism and pragmatism to form her sociological ideas (Deegan, 1988).
Hull House also offered an employment bureau, an art gallery, libraries, and music and art classes. Among the projects that the members of the Hull House opened were the Immigrants' Protective League, the Juvenile Protective Association, the first juvenile court in the United States, and a Juvenile Psychopathic Clinic.
Peace Movement
Addams helped organize the Women's Peace Party and the International Congress of Women in an effort to avert the first World War. In 1917, after America entered the war, she was expelled from the Daughters of the American Revolution.
In 1919 she was elected first president of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, the successor organization to the Women's Peace Party. She continued in the presidency until her death.
Legacy
Jane Addams was a member of the NAACP, Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, and the first vice-president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association in 1911. In 1901 she founded the Juvenile Court Committee which has since become the Juvenile Protective Association, a private nonprofit organization in Chicago that protects children from abuse and neglect. She was also actively involved with Pi Gamma Mu, the social science honor society, from the 1920s until her death, because of its emphasis on social service and the humanization of the social science disciplines. In 1998 the British Columbia Branch of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom commissioned Canadian artist Christian Cardell Corbet to create a bronze medallion of Jane Addams to celebrate her life and achievements. The medallion has since been collected by several important museums.
The Jane Addams Peace Association, together with the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, give the annual Jane Addams Children's Book Awards to children's books that promote peace, equality, multiculturalism, and peaceful solutions.
A 2007 joint resolution of the Illinois General Assembly, HJR 19 (Currie), would rename the Northwest Tollway as the Jane Addams Memorial Tollway.
The Jane Addam's Trail is a bicycling, hiking, snowmobiling, and cross country skiing trail which stretches from Freeport, Illinois to the Wisconsin state line. It is 12.85 miles long, and is part of the larger Grand Illinois Trail, which is over 575 miles long. The trail is located near her birthplace of Cedarville, Illinois.
Publications
- Democracy and Social Ethics, New York: Macmillan, 1902.
- Children in American Street Trades, New York: National Child Labor Committee, 1905.
- New Ideals of Peace, Chautauqua, N.Y.: Chautauqua Press, 1907.
- The Wage-Earning Woman and the State, Boston: Boston Equal Suffrage Association for Good Government, 1910s.
- Twenty Years at Hull House. By Jane Addams. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1912. Copyright 1910. , On-line edition at the Celebration of Women Writers
- Symposium: Child Labor on the Stage, New York: National Child Labor Committee, ?1911.
- The Long road of woman's memory, New York: Macmillan Co., 1916.
- The Spirit of youth and the City Streets.(1909)(Dodo Press 2007)
References
Other reference
- Bowen, Louise de Koven. Growing up with a City. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1926.
- Deegan, Mary. Jane Addams and the Men of the Chicago School, 1892-1918. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction, Inc., 1988.
- Knight, Louise W. Citizen: Jane Addams and the Struggle for Democracy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005.
- Polacheck, Hilda Satt. I Came a Stranger: The Story of a Hull-House Girl. Chicago, Illinois: University of Illinois Press, 1989.
See also
- Florence Kelley
- Flora Dunlap
- Mary Treglia
- Jane Addams Burial Site
- Jane Addams School for Democracy
- John H. Addams Homestead
- John Dewey
- Community practice social work
- Stanton Street Settlement
External links
Additional articles- Jane Addams - a more detailed general article at Citizendium
- Jane Addams - entry at the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Looks at her as "the first woman 'public philosopher' in United States history".
- Featured in Netcetera on findingDulcinea, 12/11/07, detailing her legacyArchival material
- Works by Jane Addams at Project Gutenberg
- Harvard University Library Open Collections Program. Women Working, 1870-1930. Jane Addams (1860-1935). A full-text searchable online database with complete access to publications written by Jane Addams.
- Works by Jane Addams listed at the Online Books PageOther
- Jane Addams Hull-House Museum
- The Bitter Cry of Outcast London by Rev. Andrew MearnsTutorials
- Review materials for studying Jane Addams
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